Restructuring Ownership: Mergers & Acquisitions Prof. Ian Giddy New York University
Mergers and Acquisitions Mergers & Acquisitions Divestitures Valuation Concept: Is a division or firm worth more within the company, or outside it? Corporate Financial Restructuring 2
Mardi-Gras Negotiation GULF MARDI GRAS Before-and-after Valuation Signed Merger Agreement Corporate Financial Restructuring 5
The Basics IBM is considering the acquisition of Basix, Inc. The shares are trading at a P/E of 11, far below IBM s P/E of 18. Based on past performance the company is expected to earn $2 per share next year, an increase from the current EPS of $1.93. If IBM acquires Basix, the long-run EPS growth rate could be raised to 5.5%. The Treasury bond yield is 4.5%, the company s beta is 1.3 and the long run market return is 11.5%. Is the company worth buying at a P/E of 12? At how much of a premium should we say fugedaboudit? Corporate Financial Restructuring 6
Basix Source: basix.xls Use constant growth model Before After Earnings $ 1.93 $ 1.93 Next year $ 2.00 $ 2.00 Growth rate 3.6% 5.5% Risk free rate 4.50% 4.50% Beta 1.3 1.30 Market return 11.50% 11.50% Req ret on equity 13.60% 13.60% Value $ 20.05 $ 24.69 P/E 10.4 12.8 Price $ 21.23 16% Corporate Financial Restructuring 7
Telia/Sonera March, 2002, FT. Sweden s Telia is merging with Finland s Sonera. Under the deal, Telia will offer 1.51 of its shares for each Sonera share, a premium of 15.8 per cent to Sonera's closing price. This gives Telia shareholders 64 per cent of the new company, and Sonera's 36 per cent. Adding the present value of E300m synergies promised annually from 2005 to the companies' combined market capitalization, and dividing by the increased number of shares, suggests a value of roughly SKr41 per Telia share, against yesterday's close of SKr35.4. But execution risks are high. The expected growth of this sector is 6-7% pa. Those risks mean Sonera ends up with a miserly premium. But although it is back from the brink of disaster, it has nowhere else to go. Governance arrangements look promising. Yet while bringing in an outside chief executive ensures neutrality, it leaves strategic questions unanswered. What happens to Telia's loss-making international carrier business, Sonera's 3G ventures and its interests in Turkey and central Asia? The strategic fit is not bad. Telia would acquire Sonera's market leadership in Finland, plus Sonera's interests in their joint ventures in the Baltic states and Russia. The biggest problem may be price. There are synergies on offer - Telia could shut down its loss-making Finnish mobile venture, and crunch head office costs. But they appear rather limited. The merged entity would not gain economies of scale in mobile to compare with a Vodafone or an Orange. Telia may find it hard to make an offer that does not destroy value for its shareholders, but is still worth Sonera bothering to accept. Corporate Financial Restructuring 8
The Gains From an Acquisition Gains from merger Synergies Control Top line Bottom line Financial Business restructuring Restructuring (M&A) Corporate Financial Restructuring 9
The Market for Corporate Control When you buy shares, you get dividends; and potential control rights There is a market for corporate control that is, control over the extent to which a business is run in the right way by the right people. This market is constrained by Government Management Some shareholders Example: Allied Signal s attempts to acquire AMP, which is located in Pennsylvania Corporate Financial Restructuring 10
Goal of Acquisitions and Mergers Increase size - easy! Increase market value - much harder! Corporate Financial Restructuring 11
Goals of Acquisitions Rationale: Firm A should merge with Firm B if [Value of AB > Value of A + Value of B + Cost of transaction] Synergy Gain market power Discipline Taxes Financing Corporate Financial Restructuring 12
AOL-Time Warner Now..when did the merger take place? Motivations? Lessons? Corporate Financial Restructuring 14
AOL-Time Warner Possible motivations Economies of scale and scope Diversification Access to new technology Regulatory arbitrage Hubris Possible problems Overestimating synergy Slow pace of integration Poor strategy Payment in stock Overpaying Poor postmerger communication Conflicting corporate cultures Weak core business Large size of target company Inadequate due diligence Poor assessment of technology Corporate Financial Restructuring 15
Who Gains What? Target firm shareholders? Bidding firm shareholders? Lawyers and bankers? Are there overall gains? Changes in corporate control increase the combined market value of assets of the bidding and target firms. The average is a 10.5% increase in total value. Corporate Financial Restructuring 16
Gains to Bidding Firm Shareholders There are positive returns to successful bidders in tender offers For successful bidders in mergers, evidence is mixed. It seems that returns are around zero. For unsuccessful bidders in both tender offers and mergers, returns are negative. Corporate Financial Restructuring 17
Do Acquisitions Benefit Shareholders? Successful Bids Technique Target Bidders Tender offer 30% 4% Merger 20% 0 Proxy contest 8% na Note: Abnormal price changes are price changes adjusted to eliminate the effects of marketwide price changes Corporate Financial Restructuring 18
Do Acquisitions Benefit Shareholders? Unsuccessful Bids Technique Target Bidders Tender offer -3% -1% Merger -3% -5% Proxy contest 8% na Corporate Financial Restructuring 19
The Price: Who Gets What? Daimler Chrysler Combined Market value before deal $52.8 $29.4 $82.2 leaked Value added by merger $18.0 Merged Value $100.2 Shareholders get 57.2% 42.8% 100% Which is now worth $57.3 $42.9 $100.2 Shareholders' shares of $4.5 $13.5 $18 the gain Premium, as % 9% 46% Corporate Financial Restructuring 20
AMP/AlliedSignal/Tyco What defenses did AMP employ? Who won? Who lost? Corporate Financial Restructuring 21
Equity Valuation: Application to M&A Prof. Ian Giddy New York University
What's It Worth? Valuation Methods Book value approach Market value approach Ratios (like P/E ratio) Break-up value Cash flow value -- present value of future cash flows Corporate Financial Restructuring 23
How Much Should We Pay? Applying the discounted cash flow approach, we need to know: 1.The incremental cash flows to be generated from the acquisition, adjusted for debt servicing and taxes 2.The rate at which to discount the cash flows (required rate of return) 3.The deadweight costs of making the acquisition (investment banks' fees, etc) Corporate Financial Restructuring 24
Valuing a Firm with DCF: An Illustration Historical financial results Adjust for nonrecurring aspects Gauge future growth Projected sales and operating profits Adjust for noncash items Projected free cash flows to the firm (FCFF) Year 1 FCFF Year 2 FCFF Year 3 FCFF Year 4 FCFF Discount to present using weighted average cost of capital (WACC) Terminal year FCFF Stable growth model or P/E comparable Present value of free cash flows + cash, securities & excess assets - Market value of debt Value of shareholders equity Corporate Financial Restructuring 25
Equity Valuation in Practice Estimating discount rate Estimating growth rate and cash flows Application to Optika Estimating synergies Application in M&A: Schirnding-Optika Corporate Financial Restructuring 26
Estimating Future Cash Flows Dividends? Free cash flows to equity? Free cash flows to firm? Corporate Financial Restructuring 27
The Gains From an Acquisition Gains from merger Synergies Control Top line Bottom line Financial Business restructuring Restructuring (M&A) Corporate Financial Restructuring 28
Optika WACC: ReE/(D+E)+RdD/(D+E) Value: FCFF/(WACC-growth rate) Equity Value: Firm Value - Debt Value = 2681-250 = 2431 Optika Growth 5% Tax rate 35% Initial Revenues 3125 COGS 89% WC 10% Equity Market Value 1300 Debt Market Value 250 Beta 1.0 Riskfree rate 7% Debt spread 1.5% Market risk spread 5.5% T+1 Revenues 3281 -COGS 2920 -Depreciation 74 =EBIT 287 EBIT(1-Tax) 187 -Change in WC 16 -Free Cash Flow to Firm 171 Cost of Equity (from CAPM) 12.50% Cost of Debt 5.53% WACC 11.38% CAPM: 7%+1(5.50%) Debt cost (7%+1.5%)(1-.35) Firm Value 2681 Corporate Financial Restructuring 29
Optika & Schirnding Optika Schirnding Combined Growth 5% 5% 5% Tax rate 35% 35% 35% Initial Revenues 3125 4400 7525 COGS 89% 87.50% WC 10% 10% 10% Equity Market Value 1300 2000 3300 Debt Market Value 250 160 410 Beta 1.0 1.0 1.0 Riskfree rate 7% 7% 7% Debt spread 1.5% 1.5% 1.5% Market risk spread 5.5% 5.5% 5.5% T+1 T+1 Revenues 3281 4620 7901 -COGS 2920 4043 6963 -Depreciation 74 200 274 =EBIT 287 378 664 EBIT(1-Tax) 187 245 432 -Change in WC 16 22 38 -Free Cash Flow to Firm 171 223 394 Cost of Equity (from CAPM) 12.50% 12.50% 12.50% Cost of Debt 5.53% 5.53% 5.53% WACC 11.38% 11.98% 11.73% Firm Value 2681 3199 5859 Corporate Financial Restructuring 30
Optika-Schirnding with Synergy Optika Schirnding Combined Synergy Growth 5% 5% 5% 5.5% Tax rate 35% 35% 35% 35% Initial Revenues 3125 4400 7525 7525 COGS 89% 87.50% 86.00% WC 10% 10% 10% 10% Equity Market Value 1300 2000 3300 3300 Debt Market Value 250 160 410 410 Beta 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 Riskfree rate 7% 7% 7% 7% Debt spread 1.5% 1.5% 1.5% 1.5% Market risk spread 5.5% 5.5% 5.5% 5.5% T+1 T+1 T+1 Revenues 3281 4620 7901 7939 -COGS 2920 4043 6963 6827 -Depreciation 74 200 274 274 =EBIT 287 378 664 837 EBIT(1-Tax) 187 245 432 544 -Change in WC 16 22 38 41 -Free Cash Flow to Firm 171 223 394 503 Cost of Equity (from CAPM) 12.50% 12.50% 12.50% 12.50% Cost of Debt 5.53% 5.53% 5.53% 5.53% WACC 11.38% 11.98% 11.73% 11.73% Firm Value 2681 3199 5859 8074 Corporate Financial Restructuring 31
Valuation in a Bidding-War Context Corporate Financial Restructuring 32
Case Study: The Acquisition of Conrail Why merge Conrail and CSX? How was the CSX offer structured? How was Conrail s resistance to an unfriendly bid structured? How would you, as a Conrail shareholder, react to the offer? What s Conrail worth? Corporate Financial Restructuring 33
The Network Norfolk Conra il CSX Southe rn Railroad Operations Operating Revenues $3,686 $4,819 $4,012 Operating Expenses 3,230 3,951 2,950 Operating Cost Ratio (%) 87.60% 82.00% 73.50% Railroad Employees 23,510 29,537 24,488 Total Carloads Originated (thousan 2,531 4,402 3,435 Revenue per Employee $156,784 $163,151 $193,690 Financial Ratios (%) Return on Sales 11.4% 6.9% 15.3% Return on Average Equity 9% 15.5% 15% Corporate Financial Restructuring 34
Conrail: Obstacles to an Unfriendly Takeover Pennsylvania Fair Value statute: bids >20% all get same price Bidder s voting rights maxed at 20% unless management approves Constituency statute: protect unions Conrail Break-up fee to CSX CSX has lock up option to buy 16m new shares Poison pill (suspended for CSX): shareholders get new shares at half price if outsider buys 10% 6-month no talk clause Corporate Financial Restructuring 35
Takeover Defenses Poison Pills Preferred flip-over stock Flip-over rights Flip-in rights Poison put bonds Shark Repellants Limitations on board changes Limitations on shareholder actions Supermajority rules Anti-greenmail limits on share repurchases Fair-price provisions Supervoting stock exchange offers Reincorporation Golden parachutes Corporate Financial Restructuring 36
Post-Takeover Bid Responses Just Say No Litigation White Knight Greenmail ESOP Pac-Man Restructuring, including Leveraged Recapitalization Share Buybacks Using cash for acquisitions Divestitures Going private Liquidation Corporate Financial Restructuring 37
What is Conrail Worth? Stand-alone value Market value: $71.00 Comparables P/E ratio) Conrail: $89/4.91=18x Discounted present value Value to acquirer Value in bidding-war context Corporate Financial Restructuring 38
Comparables Value Value Indicator Indicator Earnings Earnings Cash Cash Flow Flow Revenues Revenues Book Book Average Average Comparable Comparable Industry Industry Firms Firms Deals Deals Target Target Company Company Numbers Numbers or or Projections Projections Estimated Estimated Value Value of of Target Target Corporate Financial Restructuring 39
What is Conrail Worth? Conrail Valuation Multiples Average multiple Number Firm value Debt value Equity valuequity Value per share Price/Earnings 17.19 $ 5.69 97.81 Price/EBITDA 10.57 1017 10749.69 2094 8655.69 93.58 Price/Sales 2.41 3722 8970.02 2094 6876.02 74.34 Price/Book 3.63 32.46 117.83 Corporate Financial Restructuring 40
How Much Premium Can a Buyer Pay? Applying the discounted cash flow approach, we need to know: The incremental cash flows to be generated from the acquisition, adjusted for debt servicing and taxes The rate at which to discount the cash flows (required rate of return on equity) The deadweight costs of making the acquisition (investment banks' fees, etc) Cost of losing out! Corporate Financial Restructuring 41
Gains From an Acquisition of Conrail? Gains from merger Synergies Control Top line Bottom line Financial Business restructuring Restructuring (M&A) Corporate Financial Restructuring 42
What is Conrail Worth? Conrail Valuation Re = Rf + Beta Mkt Risk Prem CSX Valuation 1 Required return 16.15% = 6.83% + 1.3 7.17% 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Gain in Operating Income 0 188 396 550 567 TV w. const growth m 3% 4441 After tax 35% 0 122 257 358 3255 PV 0 91 164 196 1540 NPV 1990.995 Shares 90.5 NPV per share $ 22.00 Pre-merger $71.00 Total $ 93.00 Corporate Financial Restructuring 43
What is Conrail Worth? Stand-alone value Market value: $71.00 Comparables Discounted present value Value to acquirer Value in bidding-war context Corporate Financial Restructuring 44
A Higher Price for Conrail Could Norfolk Southern make a bid? How? How much? Does this change what CSX has to pay? Answer: Yes! Corporate Financial Restructuring 45
What is Conrail Worth? Conrail Valuation Re = Rf + Beta Mkt Risk P CSX Valuation 2 Required return 16.15% = 6.83% + 1.3 7.17% Gain 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Gain in Operating Income 0 240 521 730 752 TV w. const growth m 3% 5890 After tax 35% 0 156 339 475 4317 PV 0 116 216 261 2042 NPV 2634.565 Shares 90.5 NPV per share $ 29.11 Opportunity Cost 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Loss if rival gets target 0-66 -123-189 -196 TV w. const growth m 3% -1535 After tax 35% 0-43 -80-123 -1125 PV 0-32 -51-67 -532 NPV -682.571 Shares 90.5 NPV per share $ (7.54) Pre-merger $71.00 Gain $ 29.11 Opp cost $ 7.54 Total $107.65 Corporate Financial Restructuring 46
But Where Are the Profits? January 2001 http://www.railwayage.com/jun01/conrail_split.html Corporate Financial Restructuring 47
But Where Are the Profits? NSC S&P500 CSX Corporate Financial Restructuring 48
Summary: What s It Worth? Valuation Liquidation Going concern Acquisition Dissolve Break-up Comparables PV Cash Flows Synergies Control Rival Advantage Top line Bottom line Business mix Financial Corporate Financial Restructuring 49
Contact Info Ian H. Giddy NYU Stern School of Business Tel 212-998-0426; Fax 212-995-4233 Ian.giddy@nyu.edu http://giddy.org Corporate Financial Restructuring 53